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![](https://image-cdn.essentiallysports.com/wp-content/uploads/Brett-Favre.webp?width=600)
“There’s always the fear of what happens next. What’s the next step?” Those words of Brett Favre came on the back of his Parkinson’s disease diagnosis last year. Well, Favre, in his 20-year football career, often used to find himself dealing with head injuries. Those repeated brain traumas, even the mild ones, could’ve played a part in his getting diagnosed with Parkinson’s. Favre’s revelation once again raised questions over football’s link with the degenerative brain disorder as well as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
The NFL has been trying to reduce concussions by increasing player awareness and by changing certain rules to lower the odds of high-speed collisions. Ten years ago, the league also began teaming up with helmet manufacturers to try to build safer equipment. Last year, there were 182 concussions during practices and regular season games — a 17% drop compared to the previous season, which saw 219 such cases.
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Still, there is a long way to go when it comes to dealing with brain trauma and its repercussions such as CTE, which has affected numerous NFL players in the past. So, with his ongoing Parkinson’s battle after a 20-year football career, Favre has had that he is willing to donate his brain for CTE study after his passing.
Speaking with TMZ Sports, Brett Favre was asked whether he would be willing to donate his brain to scientific research after his death. While some would take some time to make this decision, Favre didn’t take long to share his stance: “I have no problems with them studying it,” before lightheartedly adding, “It probably wouldn’t take long to study it.”
Having dealt with concussions during his playing career, Favre spent a significant time after his retirement trying to find a remedy for the issue. In fact, Favre will be honored with a humanitarian award at a Super Bowl party on Saturday in New Orleans, in part, due to his work on the matter.
Now, besides being on board with the scientists utilizing his brain for CTE research, Favre also said that if were able to somehow help find a cure for such issues, “That would be the greatest accomplishment that I’m part of.”
Last year, Favre was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in January after he began having trouble using his right arm and was unable to hold a screwdriver steady. He revealed his condition during a congressional about a welfare misspending scandal in Mississippi.
In a 2022 interview with “The Bubba Army” radio show, he estimated that he had suffered thousands of concussions. “Every time my head hit the turf, there was ringing or stars going, flash bulbs, but I was still able to play,” he had said.
Favre’s words about donating his brain for CTE study eventually, come after it was revealed that former Pro Bowl guard Conrad Dobler, once dubbed the NFL’s “dirtiest player,” had chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) at the time of his death in 2023.
Dobler had famously said in a 1977 Sports Illustrated cover story that, “I’ll do anything I can get away with.” But it seems that for everything he did on the gridiron, Dobler sadly had to face the consequences.
His daughter, Erin Lewin, at the time of his passing, spoke openly about the toll those head injuries had on her dad, “My dad loved the game of football. But his love for the game took a toll on his body, his mind and his relationships. His CTE diagnosis provides a sense of closure in terms of justifying his neurological and behavioral issues that took a toll not only on him but on all of us who loved and cared for him.”
Brett Favre Open To Donating Brain For CTE Research After Death | Click to read more 👇 https://t.co/ynJWzUKme2
— TMZ Sports (@TMZ_Sports) February 8, 2025
Well, the 3-time Pro Bowler like Favre, also decided in 2010 to donate his brain for CTE research. And you know what? He wasn’t the only one in 2023 to take his last breath with CTE in his brain. Former Titans TE Frank Wycheck also had CTE at the time of his passing.
As the trend of footballers getting diagnosed with CTE after death continues, Brett Favre shed a grim picture of what it could be like in the next few years, “I would think that every player that dies from here on out. If they have their brain tested. I’d say a high percentage would have CTE.”
While there wasn’t any conclusive evidence of the disease being linked to a head injury, CTE is more common among footballers. A study in 2023 found that there’s a 61% higher chance of a footballer getting diagnosed with Parkinson’s compared to other sports.
Other than getting diagnosed with Parkinson’s, there’s also a possibility of footballers losing their lives because of CTE. Moreover, the details from a Boston University research in 2023 do paint a grim picture.
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Terror of CTE still wreaks havoc over footballer lives
In 2023, researchers at the Boston University CTE Center studied the brains of 376 deceased former NFL players and diagnosed 345 of them with chronic traumatic encephalopathy. The prevalence of CTE among NFL players is unknown as it can only be definitively diagnosed after death according to medical researchers. However, repetitive head impacts could be a chief risk factor for CTE among football players.
Ann McKee, director of the university’s CTE Center and chief of neuropathology at VA Boston Healthcare System called out the NFL following the research. “It’s a reminder of how we’ve become complacent. The NFL hasn’t done anything substantial to prevent CTE or diagnose CTE, the risk is still there. The risk is high. That’s why we released it this week,” she said in an interview with The Brink.
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This year during the AFC Championship game, Buffalo Bills cornerback Christian Benford was sidelined after suffering a concussion, once again raising questions about player safety in the league.
With the introduction of better helmet technology, the NFL is taking steps to ensure that the risk of concussions is reduced but challenges remain. The players need to be protected no matter how the game of football is to be played. Because, at the end of the day, the life of an individual is bigger than four-quarters of snaps every week.
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